Al-Hijrah School

Al-Hijrah School
Motto Excellence in Motion and Bringing out the best
Established 1988
Type Voluntary aided school
Religion Sunni Islam
Founder Mohammad Abdul Karim Saqib
Location Cherrywood Centre,
Burbidge Road

Birmingham
West Midlands
B9 4US
England
Coordinates: 52°28′51″N 1°51′13″W / 52.48089°N 1.85368°W / 52.48089; -1.85368
Local authority Birmingham City Council
DfE URN 133306 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Students 767 as of December 2015
Gender Mixed-sex (segregated)
Ages 4–16
Website www.alhijrahschool.co.uk

Al-Hijrah School is a voluntary-aided Islamic all-through school based in the Bordesley Green area of Birmingham, England. It is a specialist Science College with 767 pupils aged 4-16.[1]

History

The school was established by the Al-Hijrah Trust, a charitable organisation that was formed in Birmingham by a group of Muslims led by Mohammad Abdul Karim Saqib on 17 July 1988. The school started in Birmingham Central Mosque, operating in three rented rooms. In 1990, the school moved to new premises at Midland House in Small Heath and, throughout the 1990s, the school continued to grow. In 1997, the Trust acquired the former Cherrywood Grammar School in Bordesley Green premises from the Birmingham Local Education Authority. The purpose-built school building was constructed in 1912 and housed the grammar school, which eventually became a comprehensive school until the buildings were closed in 1994.

The building remained empty until it was purchased and an extensive renovation programme funded by the Trust commenced. The new school buildings were opened to pupils on 1 September 1999.[2] In autumn 2001, the school ceased being a private school and received voluntary-aided school status.[3]

The school continued to grow and exceeding its sponsorship target of £30,000 in 2008 for small schools, receiving £58,000. Due to the success of the school, new premises were considered to allow the school to expand.[4]

In December 2013 Al-Hijrah School was rated "inadequate" and placed in special measures by Ofsted.[5][6] Amid what Ofsted called “too heavy involvement” by governors in the day-to-day running of the school, it had gone through three head teachers in the 18 months to March 2014.[6] Soon after this Birmingham City Council replaced the governors of the school with an interim executive board. The council has stated that the governing body had created a considerable budget deficit.[7]

In December 2014 Birmingham City Council announced that it was investigating claims that state-funding for Al-Hijrah School was diverted to set up a school in Pakistan.[8]

Pupils

The 285 pupils are split into separate male and female classes. 75% of pupils are of the Pakistani ethnic minority group. The school receives over 1,000 applications for 60 places,[9] making it the most over-subscribed school in the United Kingdom.[4]

References

  1. ofsted.gov.uk: "Al-Hijrah School" Ofsted details for unique reference number 133306
  2. "History of Al-Hijrah". Al-Hijrah. Archived from the original on October 16, 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-20.
  3. Ansari, Humayun (2004). The Infidel Within: Muslims in Britain Since 1800. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. p. 337. ISBN 1-85065-685-1.
  4. 1 2 Collins, Tony (2008-07-01). "School Of The Week: Al-Hijrah School, Burbidge Road, Bordesley Green". Birmingham Mail. Retrieved 2008-12-20.
  5. www.bbc.co.uk Police 'could be sent' into failing Birmingham school, 26 May 2014
  6. 1 2 telegraph.co.uk: "Muslim extremists, and a worrying lesson for us all", 16 Mar 2014
  7. bbc.co.uk: "Al-Hijrah School: Council 'blew budget on mobile classrooms' claim", 5 Jun 2014
  8. bbc.co.uk: "Birmingham trust 'set up Pakistan school with public cash'", 1 Dec 2014
  9. Sims, Mark (2006-06-07). "Al-Hijrah Secondary School Inspection Report" (pdf). Ofsted. Retrieved 2008-12-20.
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